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Conditionality: In political economy and international relations, conditionality is the use of conditions attached to the provision of benefits such as a loan, debt relief or bilateral aid. These conditions are typically imposed by international financial institutions or regional organizations and are intended to improve economic conditions within the recipient country.

Printed dictionaries and other books with definitions for Conditionality

Volume 1:The Law and The Right, Volume 2: Foundations of Law, Volume 3: Legal Institutions and the Sources of Law, Volume 4: Scienta Juris, Legal Doctrine as Knowledge of Law and as a Source of Law, Volume 5: Legal Reasoning, A Cognitive Approach to the Law by Enrico Pattaro

With fate, the first conditionality is that which the Moirai establish between a
certain type of circumstance and a certain time and manner of death: We have
here an effect—death—that must normatively take place when the preestablished
type ...

A fifth problem with human rights conditionality is that the most common
instrument, punitive conditionality, is an arbitrary measure without due process.
While the entire aid process is notoriously lacking in transparency and
democratic ...

Conditionality is the device utilized by the IMF in its financial programs, to
establish safeguards that would increase the certainty that its resources are only
used temporariiy. This, in turn, implies the adoption of so called performance
criteria, ...

Conditionality is a form of intervention, and some call it a form of neocolonialism.
Conditionality certainly reduces the bundle of autonomous state rights known as “
sovereignty.” But sovereignty, in the form of absolute state control over its own ...

Conditionality means that the full benefit of the GSP is lost if the recipient country
does not respect the labor standards set out in the GSP legislation of the granting
country. The EU's GSP regulation has expanded the range of labor rights, the ...

Conditionality: Conditionality is a concept in international development, political
economy and international relations and describes the use of conditions attached
to a loan, debt relief, bilateral aid or membership of international organizations, ...

Conditionality: Conditionality is a concept in international development, political
economy and international relations which describes the use of conditions
attached to a loan, debt relief, bilateral aid or membership of international ...

Conditionality: Conditionality is a concept in international development, political
economy and international relations and describes the use of conditions attached
to a loan, debt relief, bilateral aid or membership of international organizations, ...

`Conditionality' is a term often associated with the conditions that the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) imposes on developing and transitional economies wishing
to receive its loans to finance balance-of-payments deficits. These conditions ...

conditionality instead leads to a further consolidation of UNDERDEVELOPMENT.
Thus, writers such as Jack Woddis and Colin Leys have argued that governments
in neo- colonial states were and are rarely puppet regimes in the literal sense ...

VOETS CONDITIONALITYConditionality refers to the criteria of
eligibility. Although some benefits and services are thought of as unconditional,
in actuality there is no such thing. Even supposedly unconditional benefits like a
Basic ...

org Conditionality Trade conditionality refers to the
practice of making trade agreementscontingent upon the behaviourof the
partners in certainissue areas(beyond the obviousneed to comply withthe
commercial ...

flow conditionality This is a form of trade restriction designed to promote
sustainability of resource stocks and of biodiversity. The condition would restrict
the amount of a natural resource that could be purchased by a given individual or
firm to ...

CONDITIONALITY is widely used in the context of European Union (EU) external
relations and enlargement, with the EU making closer ties conditional on non-
member states meeting certain political if not economic conditions.

Conditionality (1) – The practice of attaching conditions to international
economic concessions or development assistance funds, or to the opening of
international markets. The obligations accepted by a developing country in
relation ...

The form if A, B is neither necessary nor sufficient for the expression of
conditionality. Inverted forms, as in (3a), are used as conditional antecedents.
Sentences like (3b) and (3c) also typically have conditional interpretations. (3a)
Should the ...